Raindrop78
New Member
- Joined
- Jan 24, 2017
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- HSC
- 2018
For the dehydration of ethanol to ethylene is the catalyst used a zeolite catalyst? and for the hydration is it also a zeolite catalyst just diluted?
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Additionally, a more chemistry way to remember is that more energy is required to break the -OH bond with the CH3CH2- chain in Ethanol, but breaking the relatively unstable double-bond in ethylene is much easierYeah as fan96 said, the catalyst used is sulfuric acid for both the hydration of ethylene and the dehydration of ethanol.
Dehydrating ethanol to ethylene requires concentrated sulfuric acid as a catalyst.
Hydrating ethylene to ethanol requires dilute sulfuric acid as a catalyst.
A nice way to remember which catalyst is used is by thinking:
- Hydration implies adding water therefore dilute sulfuric acid is used (dilute sulfuric acid has lots of water compared to concentrated sulfuric acid)
- Dehydration implies 'removing' water therefore concentrated sulfuric acid is used (since there isn't much water in concentrated acid)